CACTUS & SUCCULENT JOURNAL (U.S.), Vol 53, 1981 299 A SALUTE TO JOSEPH NELSON ROSE LARRY W. MITICH University of California, Davis INTRODUCTION 1922-1928), the position he also held at the time of Kind, amiable Joseph Nelson Rose was a man of his death. He worked in a beautiful large study sterling qualities, willingness and patience. A with Gothic windows which had a solemn effect on great botanist and a prolific writer, he never hesi­ many visitors. tated to help and encourage those who sought his Dr. Rose had a keen mind, a big heart, a love for advice on botanical matters. family life, and a deep religious faith. In his per­ Dr. Rose is best known as the junior author of sonal relations with his colleagues, he showed the the great monograph, The Cactaceae, written in same friendly and kind spirit, great tolerance with collaboration with Nathaniel Lord Britton over 57 those less informed, and a wonderfully even years ago. Apart from his famous co-worker, he temper. He was an energetic worker, a deliberate described one genus and 38 species of cacti plus thinker, and friendly even when critical. dozens of other plants. He was a greater student of J.J. Verbeek Wolthuys, a Dutch cactophile and the Cactaceae than Dr. Britton, and his career, for editor of Succulenta, reported that in correspon­ the most part, was distinct from his. dence with Dr. Rose there was never an unan­ Dr. Rose died in 1928, the year before the Cac­ swered question. Wrote he: "Sometimes if Dr. tus and Succulent Society was founded and the Rose thought my question was sufficiently impor­ Journal established. Despite his great botanical tant, he would gather information from the au­ work with cacti and succulents, the Journal has thorities throughout the world for the answer." never before featured an article about or a picture Among his many honors were vice president, of him. Botanical Science, 1903; vice president, Washington Academy, 1908 to 1918; vice presi­ EARLY CAREER dent, Washington Botanical Society, 1907; vice Joseph Nelson Rose was born on a farm near president, 1909 to 1917, and, president in 1918, Liberty, Union County, Indiana on January 11, Washington Biological Society; and an LL.D. 1862. His father, George W. Rose, had been from Wabash College in 1925. drafted into the army during the latter part of the Four genera of plants were named for Rose Civil War and was sent to Vicksburg, Mississippi including Brittonrosea, a genus of cactus estab­ where he died. Even as a boy, Joseph Rose exhi­ lished by Dr. C. Spegazzini in 1923. bited a profound love of flowers and was a rather Dr. Rose was instrumental in building up the quiet and serious youngster. He was educated in great herbarium collection in the National the public schools in Union County and graduated Museum. The collection plus his long series of from Liberty High School in 1880. Rose entered articles published in the Contributions indicate Wabash College as its first post-graduate student how efficient he was. After becoming familiar with and received an A. M. degree in 1887 and a Ph. D. the larger European herbarium collections, Dr. in 1889. During his last two years in college, Rose Rose had the opportunity to study many of the served as an assistant in botany to Prof. John W. species in habitat—Central America and South Coulter, an eminent botanist and student of the America. His work, especially on succulent Cactaceae, who directed his doctoral thesis on the plants, benefitted immeasurably from these ex­ Umbellifereae of North America. Rose published periences and acquired lasting significance as a monographically on that difficult family both then result. The necessary routine of handling of the and later, mostly with Coulter. He also carried on plant accessions provided a liberal education to botanical studies at the Gray Herbarium; Royal Dr. Rose who was keen on floristic and taxonomic Botanical Gardens, Kew, England; and in studies. He named many species from the new Geneva, Switzerland; Berlin, Germany, and other material that came in from unfamiliar regions. European cities. Dr. Rose was responsible for bringing to the Joseph Rose married Lou B. Sims of Delphi, Smithsonian Institution one of its most important Indiana. They had two sons, Joseph and George, gifts, the renowned, large, private herbarium and and two daughters, Rebecca and Martha. botanical library of John Bonnell Smith of Balti­ Soon after his marriage in 1888, Rose was ac­ more, Maryland. cepted as Assistant Botanist in the Department of Dr. Rose was aware of and desired to further the Agriculture in Washington, D.C. On the reor­ work of conservation of desert plants and was a ganization of the National Herbarium in 1896, and dedicated worker toward this end. Shortly before its transfer to the custody of the Smithsonian In­ his death, he sent this letter to E. C. Rost: "I have stitution, he became Assistant Curator (1896 to written to a number of my friends with regard to 1905), and later Associate Curator (1905 to 1912; the preservation of the cacti of southern California 300 CACTUS & SUCCULENT JOURNAL (U.S.), Vol 53, 1981 and the matter has been laid before the National trips were undertaken by Dr. Britton and Dr. I. A. Park people and the Interior Department, and I Shafer of the New York Botanic Garden. These believe that it might be possible to have set aside trips produced an extraordinarily rich collection as a public park a section of this region, if the of living plants and herbarium material. proper influences can be brought to bear upon it." In the pursuit of cacti, Dr. Rose also travelled extensively through the western part of the BOTANICAL EXPLORATIONS United States and in Mexico. Many of these ex­ Dr. Rose explored extensively in Mexico, col­ cursions in the quest of cacti were rugged and he lecting in nearly all of the states and, being in­ endured severe hardships at times because of terested in mountain climbing, scaled Orizaba rough country and extreme climatic conditions, and Potocatepetl. He botanized there eight times and he frequently was hampered by inadequate between 1897 and 1911—in 1897,1899,1901,1903, provisions and funds. However, he had the com­ 1906,1908,1910 and 1911—collecting thousands of panionship of his son, George, on one trip to plants, many of which were new. Panama and Ecuador, and his son Joseph on a trip Rose was appointed one of the naturalists on through Mexico. Being energetic and determined the United States ship "Albatross" in 1911 and to succeed in finding what he was looking for, Dr. cruised about Baja California making many land­ Rose's efforts always were rewarded with new dis­ ings on the coast and visiting all of the large coveries. When the work on The Cactaceae was islands in the Gulf of California. A collection of completed after 10 years, Rose returned to the thousands of living and dried plants was the result National Herbarium at the Smithsonian. of this expedition. Much of the collected cacti and other succulents, especially the Crassulaceae, was sent to the Ministry of Agriculture in Wash­ ington for cultivation in greenhouses, marking the beginning of an extensive living collection which Dr. Rose used later in monographic stud­ ies. The living cacti were cared for by Manuel Fraile, a Spaniard by birth, for whom Britton and Rose named the genus Frailea. Roses special interest in the Cactaceae proba­ bly stemmed from his field work in Mexico where the cacti constitute so much of the flora. His first paper on cacti was published in 1907. More than a dozen other papers were published during the next two years, several of these being written in collaboration with Dr. N. L. Britton with whom he planned a revision of the Cactaceae of the United States and Mexico, including the West Indies. When the scope of the project was enlarged to cover the cacti of the world, Rose was granted a leave of absence from his position as Associate Curator at the Smithsonian and in 1912 accepted an appointment as Research Associate with the Carnegie Institution for preparing a monograph of the Cactaceae with N.L. Britton. Relieved from his administrative work, Dr. Rose began the task with his usual patience, quiet enthusiasm and thoroughness. First he reviewed the extensive and widely scattered descriptive lit­ erature of the cacti. Then in order to get to know JOSEPH NELSON ROSE the already described species still cultivated in Europe, he travelled to Europe in 1912 and visited Fig. 1. Joseph Nelson Rose in a portrait made about all the important herbaria, botanic gardens and the turn of the century. This is one of the two private collections, such as Kew, Paris, La Mor- pictures of him that appear in the literature. He was a kind and amiable man, qualities reflected in this tola, Rome, Naples, Munich, Darmstadt, Erfurt, picture. Halle, Dahlem, and Antwerp. The following year, Drs. Rose and Britton travelled to the West In­ PUBLICATIONS dies. In 1914, Rose visited South America from The ultimate result of Dr. Rose's extended in­ Peru and Bolivia to Santiago in Chile. In 1915 he vestigation was The Cactaceae, a magnificent, went to Brazil and Argentina, in 1916 to Ven­ beautifully illustrated monograph in four volumes ezuela, and in 1918 to Ecuador. Further collecting written in collaboration with N.L. Britton. The CACTUS & SUCCULENT JOURNAL (U.S.), Vol. 53, 1981 301 Carnegie Institution spent $100,000 in publishing himself had been working for many months in the this work, a fabulous sum at the time.
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